Your videos absolutely deserve more attention, I can't believe this only has 15 views! You explain these concepts clearly and concisely, and manage to make it entertaining as well. Also a fan of your energy/charisma; your passion really comes through in these videos. Unfortunately there's that elusive element of luck that you need as a content creator to have your stuff get picked up by the YT algorithms etc. But I'm sure that if you keep making content, eventually your stuff will take off (maybe invest some time in marketing/sharing this in various corners of the internet?). Keep it up!
@@StabbyMcStabStab There are literally government financed university courses teaching exactly this. If this was a joke nevermind, but it's not really funny, since many people could have written such a comment in all seriousness.
Great video, thanks for putting these out there. One simple question I have: if the computer, as you say, doesn't "know" or "understand" anything it computes, then why should it be taken as a foundational concept for understanding the mind? What exactly would allow computers to "know" or "understand", i.e. do actual cognition? And if they don't do actual cognition, then why should we take Computational Theory of Mind seriously?
I have discovered what the mind does and how. It is that part of the computational brain that is not a computer. This does not contradict your lecture. One can place names on various processes as one wishes. For me, my work, the brain contains a computer that allows us to determine things like how much change to give a customer who purchases $7.50 in goods. The mind, again by definition, is the part of the brain doing something else--which I explain. All the best.
Your videos absolutely deserve more attention, I can't believe this only has 15 views! You explain these concepts clearly and concisely, and manage to make it entertaining as well. Also a fan of your energy/charisma; your passion really comes through in these videos. Unfortunately there's that elusive element of luck that you need as a content creator to have your stuff get picked up by the YT algorithms etc. But I'm sure that if you keep making content, eventually your stuff will take off (maybe invest some time in marketing/sharing this in various corners of the internet?). Keep it up!
Thanks for the encouragement! It means a lot!
It's not luck. Do you know how dangerous things would be for the establishment if everyone could compute properly..?
@@StabbyMcStabStab There are literally government financed university courses teaching exactly this. If this was a joke nevermind, but it's not really funny, since many people could have written such a comment in all seriousness.
How does this guy only have 5k subscribers? I thought it was 5million at first glance... Keep up the good work
Great video, thanks for putting these out there. One simple question I have: if the computer, as you say, doesn't "know" or "understand" anything it computes, then why should it be taken as a foundational concept for understanding the mind? What exactly would allow computers to "know" or "understand", i.e. do actual cognition? And if they don't do actual cognition, then why should we take Computational Theory of Mind seriously?
I have discovered what the mind does and how. It is that part of the computational brain that is not a computer. This does not contradict your lecture. One can place names on various processes as one wishes. For me, my work, the brain contains a computer that allows us to determine things like how much change to give a customer who purchases $7.50 in goods. The mind, again by definition, is the part of the brain doing something else--which I explain. All the best.
This is super helpful!!! thanks a lot for these videos xddd
ah wheres your subscribers bro